Athlete Continues to Set Big Goals after Spinal Cord Injury

Brett Gravatt has returned to athletics after sustaining a spinal cord injury.

Brett Gravatt

Brett Gravatt has returned to athletics after sustaining a spinal cord injury.

Brett Gravatt, 21, is a rising track star for Team USA. In January 2017, he was selected to train, in residency, with the U.S. Paralympic team at the Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista, California. Six days a week, he trains among the best U.S. athletes in their sports.

A wheelchair racer, Brett sprints in the 100-, 400- and 800-meter events. He’s attempting to qualify for nationals, to be held at UCLA in June. If Brett places highly enough there, he would make the U.S. national team heading to London for this July’s World Para Athletics Championships. Brett’s ultimate goal is the 2020 Summer Paralympic Games in Tokyo.

“It’s all about pushing yourself,” he says. “Big goals open your eyes. Why not shoot for the stars? Your motivation dies out without a goal.”

“Nothing can prepare you for how grueling and taxing that is, mentally as much as physically,” Brett says. “But you learn habits. You see results and you feed off the progress.”

He also had access to Shepherd Center’s sports program, the largest adaptive sports program in North America. There, Brett got a glimpse of how his competitive desire could be applied in new sports.

Brett returned to Penn State and served as a student coach for the soccer team. He also trained in the university’s Ability Athletics program and tried out for the 2016 Rio Games – coming within one spot of making the U.S. Paralympic team. That’s nothing but fuel for Tokyo 2020.

“Finding this athletic pursuit has given me focus and direction,” Brett says. “You never truly understand how strong you can be, what you’re capable of, until adversity hits you.”

Written by Phillip Jordan

About Shepherd Center

Shepherd Center, located in Atlanta, Georgia, is a private, not-for-profit hospital specializing in medical treatment, research and rehabilitation for people with spinal cord injury, brain injury, multiple sclerosis, spine and chronic pain, and other neuromuscular conditions. Founded in 1975, Shepherd Center is ranked by U.S. News & World Report among the top 10 rehabilitation hospitals in the nation. In its more than four decades, Shepherd Center has grown from a six-bed rehabilitation unit to a world-renowned, 152-bed hospital that treats more than 935 inpatients, 541 day program patients and more than 7,300 outpatients each year.